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Heavy home defeat for the Magpies

7:12pm Saturday 23rd February 2008


Cristiano Ronaldo turned in another breathtaking display as Manchester United made the most of Newcastles woes to close the gap on Barclays Premier League leaders Arsenal to three points.

The Portugal international claimed a double either side of half-time to take his tally for the season to 29, with Wayne Rooney, who had opened the scoring on 25 minutes, adding a brace and substitute Louis Saha scoring against his former club after Abdoulaye Faye had pulled one back.

It was just what manager Sir Alex Ferguson had ordered after the Gunners had conceded a late equaliser at Birmingham earlier in the day to pass up the chance of establishing an eight-point lead.

United were simply irresistible on a day when their pace and movement were just too much for an angst-ridden Newcastle side, who have now not won in 10 league games and taken only three points from the last 30 on offer.

But in truth, the Red Devils would have beaten better sides than the beleaguered Magpies on this form and Arsenal can be in little doubt that the men from Old Trafford are in hot pursuit.

IT wasn't quite 6-0, but Newcastle's latest humiliation at the hands of Manchester United was every bit as chastening as last month's trouncing at Old Trafford.

It was a case of men against boys for the second time in six weeks as Sir Alex Ferguson's side underlined just how far the Magpies have slipped since they recorded a 5-0 victory over the Red Devils a little over 11 years ago.

And with Kevin Keegan's wait for the first victory of his second spell as Newcastle boss having been extended to six games, the remaining 11 matches of the season will see United battling against the drop.

Make no mistake about it, having taken just three points from the last available 30, Newcastle have tumbled into the heart of a relegation fight.

They should get out of it, but the lack of creativity on display at St James' Park this evening hardly augurs well and Newcastle's defence remains as porous and ponderous as ever.

Yes, Manchester United were impressive, with Cristiano Ronaldo helping himself to an impudent double, Wayne Rooney grabbing a brace of his own and Michael Carrick calmly pulling the strings at the heart of midfield.

But with Alan Smith running around like a headless chicken and Joey Barton repeatedly passing the ball to nobody in particular, Newcastle failed to ask any questions of the reigning Premier League champions.

And with Abdoulaye Faye and Steven Taylor failing to keep things tight at the back, Manchester United looked dangerous whenever they ventured into the Newcastle half.

If things don't improve soon, the Magpies could find themselves perilously close to the bottom three going into the final three or four weeks of the season.

Sir Bobby Robson, who celebrated his 75th birthday on Monday, was presented on the pitch before kick-off after the club he once managed had earlier unveiled a bust in his honour at St James Park.

When a team has not won in nine Premier League games, perhaps the last thing they need is to face an outfit scenting blood in the title race and with its two most dangerous players in clinical form.

That record was effectively stretched into double figures by half-time as a home defence which battled manfully throughout, twice capitulated in the face of extreme pressure and were punished on both occasions.

Kevin Keegan might have thought his players had ridden out the early storm - indeed, they had gone close to the opening goal with just four minutes gone when skipper Michael Owen flicked a near-post shot wide from Charles NZogbias cross.

However, with 25 minutes gone and Ronaldo having swapped wings with the tricky Nani, the older man curled an inch-perfect cross to the far post for Rooney to side-foot home amid a conspicuous lack of black and white shirts.

The fact that the goal came just seconds after Owen had seen penalty appeals for an untidy challenge on him by international team-mate Rio Ferdinand waved away by referee Chris Foy simply rubbed salt into the wound.

To their credit, the home side did their best to mount a fightback, Damien Duff and James Milner both going close.

Former Manchester City midfielder Joey Barton gave the ball away in the middle of the park and United once again tore their hosts open with lightning pace and bewildering movement.

Ronaldos scorching run gave the Newcastle defence no chance, but it was Michael Carricks incisive pass which handed him the chance to slide a shot past the helpless Shay Given.

The Magpies lost 6-0 at Old Trafford on January 12 and on that day, they went in at the break level, and that cannot have made for an easy team-talk as Keegan looked for fresh inspiration.

Givens involvement ended at the break when he was replaced by Steve Harper with his groin injury still causing him problems before the break.

Newcastle set about their task with a certain determination and went close twice in quick succession, Duff forcing a solid save from Edwin van der Sar at his near post and then United old boy Nicky Butt smashing a long-range effort wide.

United were content to try to hit the home side on the break, and they did that to stunning effect on 56 minutes when, after spurning an earlier opportunity, Ronaldo made the most of Steven Taylors slip to round Harper and fire home the third goal.

Duff and NZogbia both went close as the Magpies gamely fought on, but it was defender Faye who claimed a little consolation 12 minutes from time with a close-range finish.

But United had to have the last word, and they did when Rooney curled home a superb right-foot shot two minutes later with Saha setting the seal on a comfortable win in injury time.

Watch the match highlights from Monday, February 25

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